English

Candidate Identification and Interference Removal in SETI@home

Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics 2011-09-09 v1

Abstract

SETI@home, a search for signals from extraterrestrial intelligence, has been recording data at the Arecibo radio telescope since 1999. These data are sent via the Internet to the personal computers of volunteers who have donated their computers' idle time toward this search. To date, SETI@home volunteers have detected more than 4.2 billion potential signals. While essentially all of these potential signals are due to random noise processes, radio frequency interference (RFI), or interference processes in the SETI@home instrumentation, it is possible that a true extraterrestrial transmission exists within this database. Herein we describe the process of interference removal being implemented in the SETI@home post-processing pipeline, as well as those methods being used to identify candidates worthy of further investigation.

Cite

@article{arxiv.1109.1595,
  title  = {Candidate Identification and Interference Removal in SETI@home},
  author = {Eric J. Korpela and Jeff Cobb and Matt Lebofsky and Andrew Siemion and Joshua von Korff and Robert C. Bankay and Dan Werthimer and David Anderson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1109.1595},
  year   = {2011}
}

Comments

5 pages, including 1 figure, PDF generated by openoffice.org 3.3.0

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